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Wake Tech is doing its part to address economic mobility head-on by reaching kids early and rallying around them as they climb to success.
It’s that time of year when we find ourselves reflecting on milestones and achievements as we resolve to take the next year next level. For Raleigh—a city that’s grown pretty accustomed to topping “best of” lists—2023 brought numerous accolades. And, yet, in our November Money Issue, we found the city still stacks up as a relatively affordable place to live.
But here’s the catch: not for everyone. The proof lies in one not-so-flattering stat—a lowest of lows that haunts us like the ghost of Christmas past. In 2014, a study led by Harvard economist and professor Raj Chetty revealed Raleigh ranked 48th on a list of the 50 biggest metro areas in the country when it comes to economic mobility. In other words, a child born poor in Raleigh is more likely to stay poor in Raleigh compared to other metropolitan areas. Cue record scratch.
“It’s the opposite of what you think it should be,” says Dr. Scott Ralls, president of Wake Tech, NC’s largest community college. “My first thought was, ‘We can’t be that bad.’ But even if Chetty’s numbers were off by a little bit… it shouldn’t be that way in Raleigh, a place with so much opportunity.”
Now, as we close in on a decade since those startling results from Chetty’s project were unveiled, it seems Raleigh has done little to improve its position (unlike Charlotte, which, after being ranked dead last, took it personally—and jumped into action). But Wake Tech is working to recast the narrative. In 2021 the college introduced a strategic plan called Reach and Rally, which structures programs to foster economic mobility based on a philosophy called ladder economics. “The thing about a ladder is it’s not about how high you can jump,” Ralls explains. “You’ve just got to get from one rung to the next.”
The base rung: outreach. “If you’re going to have an economic mobility impact, you can’t take students—you have to reach them,” says Ralls. To do so, Wake Tech aims to connect with students from families of limited economic means, often with limited exposure to higher education, through embedded supports at Title I high schools—and by cultivating partnerships with orgs such as Communities in Schools, Juntos, and Boys & Girls Clubs serving Wake County.
“Our executive vice president, Dr. Nicole Reaves, says this: ‘If it’s not in your neighborhood and if you don’t really see it, then you don’t dream to be it.’ So we have to kind of broaden what the neighborhood of Raleigh is because Raleigh’s broader neighborhood includes every opportunity imaginable,” says Ralls. “But… you first have to know it’s there; then you have to know it’s possible—and possibility becomes ladders; possibility becomes support.”
That’s where the “rally” aspect comes in. Wake Tech works to keep students tethered to their “ladder” through a robust support system made up of advisers, success coaches and career development specialists.
And thanks to Reach and Rally, change is happening—albeit slowly. “[Economic mobility] will not be impacted by Wake Tech overnight, but it will be made better by Wake Tech,” Ralls emphasizes—“and I think we can say it is being made better by Wake Tech.”
Ultimately, Wake Tech is, in many ways, Raleigh’s best answer to the question: “How can we offer children the best chance to rise out of poverty?” As we embark on a new year, it’s imperative our city’s collective New Year’s resolution be to make Raleigh a good place to live for everyone. So, let’s invest in our community now—and perhaps stage a comeback more rewarding than any accolade Raleigh’s seen yet. waketech.edu
“A place like Raleigh shouldn’t have [poor economic mobility] because there is opportunity here, and there is a place like Wake Tech here, and you don’t have to be rich to go here. There is a way to change what that study is saying.”
—Dr. Scott Ralls, president of Wake Tech
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